# Intra-operative extracorporeal irradiation of tumour-invaded craniotomy bone flap in meningioma: a case series

**Authors:** William H. Cook, Katherine Burton, Sarah J. Jefferies, Simon L. Duke, Rajesh Jena, Neil G. Burnet, Ramez W. Kirollos, Adel E. Helmy, Thomas Santarius

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00701-024-06126-7 · 2024-05-24

## TL;DR

This study examines the outcomes of using irradiated bone flaps during meningioma surgery, finding low recurrence and infection rates.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world evidence on the effectiveness and safety of extracorporeal irradiation of tumorous calvaria in meningioma patients.

## Key findings

- Five out of 18 patients experienced tumor recurrence, none related to the bone flap.
- Two patients had wound infections requiring explant surgery.
- EITC showed good outcomes and cost-effectiveness compared to other reconstructive methods.

## Abstract

Extracorporeal irradiation of tumorous calvaria (EITC) can be performed to restore function and form of the skull after resection of bone-invasive meningioma. We sought to examine the rate of tumour recurrence and other selected outcomes in patients undergoing meningioma resection and EITC.

Retrospective single-centre study of adult patients undergoing meningioma resection and EITC between January 2015 and November 2022 at a tertiary neurosurgical centre. Patient demographics, surgery data, tumour data, use of adjuvant therapy, surgical complications, and tumour recurrences were collected.

Eighteen patients with 11 (61%) CNS WHO grade 1, 6 (33%) grade 2, and 1 (6%) grade 3 meningiomas were included. Median follow-up was 42 months (range 3–88). Five (28%) patients had a recurrence, but none were associated with the bone flap. Two (11%) wound infections requiring explant surgery occurred. Six (33%) patients required a further operation. Two operations were for recurrences, one was for infection, one was a washout and wound exploration but no evidence of infection was found, one patient requested the removal of a small titanium implant, and one patient required a ventriculoperitoneal shunt for a persistent CSF collection. There were no cases of bone flap resorption and cosmetic outcome was not routinely recorded.

EITC is feasible and fast to perform with good outcomes and cost-effectiveness compared to other reconstructive methods. We observed similar recurrence rates and lower infection rates requiring explant compared to the largest series of cranioplasty in meningioma. Cosmetic outcome is universally under-reported and should be reported in future studies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** meningioma (MONDO:0003057)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** meningioma (MESH:D008579), tumorous (MESH:D009369), CSF collection (MESH:D002559), infection (MESH:D007239), wound infections (MESH:D014946)
- **Chemicals:** titanium (MESH:D014025)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11126431/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11126431